Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Man Takes Fight Over Airline's Treatment Of Overweight Passengers To Court

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Apr, 2016 11:26 AM
    HALIFAX — A Halifax man who advocates on behalf of airline passengers argued in Federal Court on Monday that even though he is not overweight himself, he should have the right to file a complaint about a carrier's "discriminatory" practice of bumping obese travellers.
     
    Gabor Lukacs told the three-member panel that the Canadian Transportation Agency should hear his complaint about the way Delta Air Lines asks large passengers to move to another seat, take a later flight or buy an additional seat.
     
    "The airline is discriminating based on size," he said in court. "It could be eye colour....It's a slippery slope."
     
    The agency dismissed his initial complaint in November 2014, finding that Lukacs had no private or public standing in the matter because he wasn't directly affected by it.
     
    "Because what we are protecting here are public and societal interests, not individual interests, it doesn't matter whether the complainant is me or someone who is actually large," he said outside court in Halifax.
     
     
    "The question of who the complainant is should be utterly irrelevant because it affects everybody."
     
    He referenced the increase in baggage fees that started with one airline and then was adopted by others.
     
    Lukacs said dismissing his complaint simply because the issue didn't affect him personally was akin to disregarding someone's concerns over contaminated food just because they weren't made sick by it.
     
    He said he has a demonstrated expertise in the area of passenger issues, having filed more than two dozen successful complaints with the agency and, as a result, bringing about improvements to the industry.
     
    He says the 46 mentions of his name in agency decisions show that he has a "long-standing, real and continuing interest in the rights of air passengers."
     
    The panel reserved its decision to a later date.
     
    A lawyer for Delta declined to comment outside the court.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Final Cost Of 2015 Alberta Election Almost $19m: Chief Electoral Officer

    Final Cost Of 2015 Alberta Election Almost $19m: Chief Electoral Officer
    He said costs went up due in part to Alberta's 10 per cent population increase and because then-premier Jim Prentice decided to drop the writ a year early.

    Final Cost Of 2015 Alberta Election Almost $19m: Chief Electoral Officer

    Calgary City Council Appoints Ethics And Integrity Advisers

    Calgary city council has appointed an integrity commissioner as well as an ethics adviser.

    Calgary City Council Appoints Ethics And Integrity Advisers

    Crown To Cross-examine Father Charged In Child's Meningitis Death

    Crown To Cross-examine Father Charged In Child's Meningitis Death
    David Stephan, 32, and his wife Collet, 35, are charged with failing to provide the necessaries of life for their son Ezekiel in March 2012.

    Crown To Cross-examine Father Charged In Child's Meningitis Death

    Charities Directorate Flags Suspected Terrorist Financing Cases For Senators

    Charities Directorate Flags Suspected Terrorist Financing Cases For Senators
    The audit materials provided to the committee should give senators a sense of the complexity of the revenue agency's work, said Cathy Hawara, director general of the charities directorate.

    Charities Directorate Flags Suspected Terrorist Financing Cases For Senators

    IMF Cuts Canada's Growth Estimates For 2016, 2017 As Part Of Global Trend

      The IMF is now projecting Canada's economy to grow by 1.5 per cent this year and by 1.9 per cent next year.

    IMF Cuts Canada's Growth Estimates For 2016, 2017 As Part Of Global Trend

    State Of Emergency Lifted After Fish Plant Destroyed By Fire In Newfoundland

    State Of Emergency Lifted After Fish Plant Destroyed By Fire In Newfoundland
    BAY DE VERDE, N.L. — The mayor of a Newfoundland town that saw its sprawling fish plant burn to the ground has lifted a state of emergency.

    State Of Emergency Lifted After Fish Plant Destroyed By Fire In Newfoundland